Example sentences of "[noun] to [art] [noun] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Miguel Trovoada , an independent opposition leader who had returned from exile to the islands in May 1990 [ see p. 37674 ] , was elected President on March 3 , 1991 .
2 Safer to close his eyes and his mind to her and give his entire concentration to the matter in hand ; a resolution to which he firmly held , even when , after a tumultuous welcome at Brighouse — the nearest railway station to Frizingley — he was escorted , with an appropriate accompaniment of banners and Chartist hymns , to a lodging-house at the top of St Jude 's street where the landlady , Mrs Sairellen Thackray , had offered to accommodate him free of charge .
3 If there was a " consumer revolution " in eighteenth-century England , it must have owed a very great deal to an improvement in road transport which , according to one writer , allowed " our very carriages to travel with almost winged expedition " .
4 The aim of this project is to link , for the first time , social psychological models of situation perception to the controversy in personality theory concerning consistency of behaviour across situations .
5 Manpower was then used to tow it from Morley to a warehouse in Chickenley ( old scores must have been forgotten ! ) , where it was stored and painted .
6 ‘ If I die abroad in exile , let my body rest in a temporary grave until my mortal remains be transferred to our dear homeland , ’ said the Montenegrin President , Branko Kostic , reading the royal will and testament to the crowds in Cetinje Square , who carried flags and portraits of Nicholas and his queen , Milena .
7 He walked Eleanor to the station in silence and gave her a parting hug .
8 A 17-strong touring party , including the ceilidh band the Old Blind Dogs , will take the production from Benbecula to Bowmore and Tiree to the Tramway in Glasgow , transported by two minibuses , a car and Iain M Campbell 's double-decker , Magnus the Art Bus .
9 Equation ( E.8 ) can be used to convert the energy flux in gravitational waves to the strain in space–time on Earth .
10 Ex.g shows the prelude to an arioso in G minor which portrays the arrival of the sea-goddess Thetis , Achilles ' mother .
11 However , his voyages as supercargo on ships in the ‘ country trade ’ between India and China opened his eyes to the opportunities in Singapore and Canton .
12 Embarrassed , I dropped my eyes to the hymnsheet in front of me .
13 Over the last decade new recruits to the game in America and Canada have been drawn to the international code and following the merger most tournaments will be played to its rules .
14 Hayek , for example , tends to trace the problems of constructivist rationalism to the rise in authority of the natural sciences and hence takes the form of a critique of ‘ scientism ’ .
15 Clear prejudgment of a case is to be disapproved of , but the success of a piece of legislation may well be dependent upon the administrators enforcing the institution 's policies with some rigour ; indifference to the end in view , even if it were possible , might well be undesirable .
16 Natural selection was not the only scientific manifestation of this spirit , but Darwinism supplied useful catch-phrases such as ‘ the survival of the fittest ’ , which could be used by those seeking a scientific justification for their indifference to the losers in Nature 's great race .
17 Meanwhile opposition to the treaty in France mounted .
18 Adopting the theology of liberation , the main body of the Salvadorean church therefore became identified with opposition to the regimes in power during the 1970s .
19 Presumably , he is entitled to take into account the likelihood of opposition to the march in question , although this is problematic .
20 Looking down corrected the illusion , so instead he applied his mind to the business in hand .
21 Some observers suggested that Brundtland 's stance reflected domestic pressures to " stand up " to external attacks on Norway 's fishing industry , after she was criticized for making concessions to the EC in fisheries talks earlier in the year .
22 There 's one in Sunderland with 2,500 dwellings ; the older end is respectable , with tree-lined avenues and mature privets , and concessions to the eye in design details around the doors and windows .
23 In his absence the regents made concessions to the magnates in return for grants of taxes in aid of the war with Scotland .
24 Some of its activities have modified the understandings of the operation of the Convention , in effect constituting amendment through practice where there are no parties to a treaty in force .
25 Costs have to be looked at in two respects , first , the costs which may be ordered to be paid by one of the parties to the other in litigation , and , secondly , the costs which a client is obliged to pay the solicitor .
26 ( 3 ) provides that copies of reasons in writing are to be given by the board to all the parties to the hearing in respect of which they have been requested , and subs .
27 ‘ The Project ’ shall mean the programme of work to be carried out by the Parties to the Agreement in accordance with the terms and conditions of the IEATP ‘ Grant Offer Letter ’ which shall mean the letter from the Secretary of State dated 10 July 1990 and attached as Addendum C.
28 Practitioners should bear in mind the obligations under the rules to serve a statement of special damages with the statement or particulars of claim , as the case may be , and the Practice Note ( QBD ) ( Personal Injury Actions : Special Damage ) ( 1984 ) 1 August ( [ 1984 ] 1 WLR 1127 ) which requires the service of particulars of special damage , in the form of a schedule if appropriate , so that the extent to which special damages are agreed may be indicated by the other parties to an action in advance of the trial .
29 This applies in particular to such features of English High Court procedure as mutual discovery of documents by the parties with or without a court order ; orders for the service on other parties of proofs of oral evidence intended to be led at the trial ; and certain orders which may be made even before the commencement of proceedings ( disclosure of documents by potential parties to an action in respect of personal injuries or death , and orders for the inspection , preservation or testing of property which may become the subject-matter of proceedings ) .
30 Prejudgments should stand or fall according to whether they pass the statutory test of section 2(2) by causing a substantial risk of serious prejudice to the proceedings in question .
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